The number of immigrants caught trying to enter the U.S. illegally has dropped 53 percent.

Federal debt has more than doubled, and annual deficits, after shrinking, are again on the rise.

The home ownership rate has dropped by 4 percentage points.

The number of Americans on food stamps is up 36 percent.

Oil imports are down 53 percent, and wind and solar power have quadrupled.

The number of people lacking health insurance has gone down by 15.2 million.

Those are just some of the findings in our latest installment of Obama’s Numbers.

Analysis

As we do every three months, we offer here a fresh update of selected statistical indicators of what has happened since Barack Obama first took the oath of office in January 2009. We leave it to our readers to judge how much credit or blame the president deserves for what has happened on his watch, and we caution that no single number or collection of numbers can tell the entire story. What we offer here are some key yardsticks from sources we consider solid and reliable.

Jobs & Unemployment

Number of Jobs — The economy has added another 401,000 jobs since we published our last report in April. As of June, total nonfarm employment stood 10,122,000 higher than when Obama first took office.

That 10 million gain is less than half the nearly 23 million jobs gained during the booming years of Bill Clinton’s presidency, but far greater than the 1.3 million added during President George W. Bush’s eight years, which were plagued by two recessions.

Unemployment Rate — Meanwhile the unemployment rate has ticked down since our last report to 4.9 percent in June. It had dropped even lower — to 4.7 percent — in May.

It’s now 2.9 percentage points lower than it was in January 2009, when the president first took office in the midst of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. The economic crisis drove the unemployment rate to 10 percent within months of Obama’s first entering office.

The jobless rate is now significantly lower than the historical norm. In all the months between 1948 and the time Obama took office, the median jobless rate was 5.5 percent.

Job Openings — The number of job openings has more than doubled under Obama to the highest number in the more than 15 years the Bureau of Labor Statistics has been tracking it.

In April, the most recent month on record, the number of job openings reached 5,788,000, equaling a record first set in July 2015. That’s 109 percent more than in January 2009. The number of job openings now has exceeded 5 million for 15 consecutive months.

That rate, which is the portion of the entire civilian population age 16 and older that is either employed or currently looking for work, is now 3 percentage points lower than when Obama took office. That decline is due mostly to the post-World War II baby boomers reaching retirement age, and other demographic factors.

Long-term Unemployment — One lingering effect of the 2007-2009 recession is the number of long-term unemployed — those who have been looking for work for 27 weeks or longer.

There were still nearly 2 million long-term jobless in June. That’s 720,000 fewer than when the president first took office, but still 655,000 higher than in December 2007, at the start of the Great Recession.

On average, those who were unemployed in June had been without work for 27.7 weeks. That’s 11.1 weeks longer than at the start of the recession, and 7.9 weeks longer than the month Obama first took office.

Prices & Wages

Consumer Prices – Overall inflation during Obama’s time in office has been less than half the historical average.

The average yearly rise in the Consumer Price Index under Obama has been just 1.7 percent, measured from December to December. That’s well under half the post-World War II average, according to BLS figures. From 1946 to 2008, the average December-to-December rise in the CPI was a bit more than 4 percent.

And inflation has slowed as the economy has warmed up. In the most recent 12 months on record, ending in May, the CPI rose less than 1.1 percent.

For the first seven years and four months of Obama’s time in office, the CPI has gone up by only 13 percent. In the eight years of the Bush administration, the CPI went up 20.7 percent.

That’s up by nearly 21 cents since our last report, but still only 24 percent above the abnormally low point at which it stood on Inauguration Day 2009, when demand was suppressed by a worldwide recession. And it’s 44 percent lower than the record price of more than $4.11 per gallon reached in July 2008, when George W. Bush was in the White House.

Real Weekly Earnings – The recovering economy, coupled with modest increases in prices, has boosted the buying power of weekly paychecks since Obama took office, especially in the last two years.

Most of that gain is recent. Real weekly wages are up 1.1 percent in the most recent 12 months, and 3.4 percent in the most recent 24 months.

Those figures include salaried managers and supervisors. But the gains have been almost as large for rank-and-file workers. The BLS measure of inflation-adjusted average weekly earnings for production and nonsupervisory employees was 4.1 percent higher in May than when Obama first entered the White House.

Profits & Markets

After-tax profits were running at an annual rate of nearly $1.7 trillion in the first quarter of 2016, the most recent figures available. That’s 152 percent higher than in the recession-wracked quarter just before Obama entered office.

That quarter’s profits were unusually low, ravaged by the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. But profits bounced back far more quickly than jobs or wages, and have seen an epic run during Obama’s time in office.

After-tax profits have exceeded the best pre-Obama level for the past 20 quarters running. They hit a record rate of more than $1.8 trillion in the second quarter of 2015. The most recent quarterly rate is 20 percent higher than the best quarter prior to Obama’s entering the White House, which was the third quarter of 2006.

After all that, stock prices landed higher than they were as of our last report. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was 165 percent higher at the close on July 8 than it was the day Obama took office.

Unauthorized Immigrants

Border Crossings — Under Obama, the number of unauthorized immigrants caught trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border — a key indicator of the flow of illegal immigration — has plunged dramatically. And it has done so while the number of agents stationed at the border has gone up.

Apprehensions at the U.S.-Mexico border fell to 331,333 last fiscal year, a reduction of 53 percent compared with the 705,005 unauthorized immigrants apprehended at the southwest border in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 2008, less than four months before Obama first took office.

The number of agents stationed at the U.S.-Mexico border nearly doubled under President Bush, growing from 9,147 agents at the southwest border in fiscal year 2001 to 17,408 in FY 2009, under funding levels established by Bush.

Under Obama, that number continued to increase, hitting a peak of 18,611 in FY 2013. The number declined to 17,522 in the last fiscal year, about 1 percent above the number Obama inherited.

Unauthorized Immigrant Population — Meanwhile, as we reported in our previous update, the number of people living in the U.S. illegally has declined, according to independent estimates by demographers.

Such estimates are inexact; those breaking the law by being here can’t be expected to confess that to Census officials. But demographers have applied consistent methodologies from year to year, and agree that the trend has been downward.

Trade

In fact, the most recent quarterly report from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis shows U.S. exports of goods and services have gone up by only 27.2 percent since the quarter before Obama took office.

Lately, exports actually have been shrinking as the economies of China and other U.S. trading partners struggle. First-quarter exports were down 1.8 percent from the previous quarter, and were 5.3 percent below the same period a year earlier.

Lately, both exports and imports have been shrinking — but exports are going down a bit faster. Imports were down 5 percent in the first quarter of 2016, compared with the same period a year earlier. Exports, as mentioned, were down 5.3 percent.

Trade Deficit — As we reported in our previous update, annual figures show the U.S. trade deficit in goods and services shrunk 24 percent between 2008, the year before Obama took office, and 2015, the most recent full year on record.

Now we can also report that the trend is continuing. During the first five months of 2016, the trade deficit has shrunk further, down 3.5 percent compared with the same period in 2015.

Food Stamps

The number of people receiving food stamps has dropped by more than 1.6 million since our last report, another sign of an improving economy.

But as of April, the most recent month on record, nearly 43.6 million Americans were still receiving the food aid, now known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

That’s down by 8.8 percent from the record level set in December 2012, but it is still 36.2 percent higher than it was when Obama took office in 2009.

As we noted when Republicans called Obama the “Food Stamp President,” 14.7 million people were added to the food-stamp rolls during George W. Bush’s time in office. By comparison, the net gain under Obama now stands at under 11.6 million — and the number leaving the food stamp rolls has accelerated lately.

Health Insurance

The number of people lacking health insurance has dropped dramatically under Obama, thanks largely to the Affordable Care Act.

In all of 2015, according to the most recent data from the National Health Interview Survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 28.6 million people of all ages reported being without coverage at the time they were interviewed.

That’s 7.4 million fewer uninsured than in 2014, and 15.2 million fewer than during all of 2008, before Obama took office (see Table 1.1a).

As a percentage of all U.S. residents, the uninsured have dropped to 9.1 percent of the population last year, from 14.7 percent in 2008.

Home Ownership

The home ownership rate slipped back down since our last report, to nearly the lowest point in almost half a century.

That’s 0.3 percentage points lower than in the previous quarter, and just 0.1 percentage points above the rate for the second quarter of 2015, which was the lowest since 1967.

The home ownership rate began to slide before Obama took office. It peaked at 69.2 percent in the second quarter of 2004.

But most of the decline since then has occurred under Obama. The most recent rate is 4 percentage points lower than in the quarter just before Obama first entered the White House.

Debt and Deficits

Debt – The federal debt has more than doubled under Obama.

As of July 6, the U.S. government’s debt owed to the public was just shy of $14 trillion, an increase of 121 percent since Obama first took office. That’s practically unchanged since our last report, despite the seasonal influx of tax dollars that pour in around the annual April filing deadline.

The debt also has grown dramatically even when measured as a percentage of the growing economy, from 52 percent of gross domestic product at the end of fiscal year 2009 to a projected 75.4 percent by the end of the current fiscal year, according to the most recent estimate, published March 24, by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

But without further cuts in spending or increases in revenue, Obama will leave his successor with rising debt and deficits.

CBO projects that under current law, annual deficits will rise to $534 billion in the current fiscal year, and will again top $1 trillion in 2022 and beyond. As things stand, federal debt owed to the public will reach nearly 80 percent of GDP in 2022, and nearly 86 percent in 2026, CBO projects.

And even if the GOP-controlled Congress were to accept all of Obama’s current budget proposals — which is not likely — CBO estimates that deficits would shrink for a while, and be smaller (mainly due to proposed tax increases). But they would still rise again soon.

CBO projects that under Obama’s proposed budget, deficits would shrink to $383 billion in fiscal year 2018, and then rise to $972 billion in 2026.

Energy

U.S. Crude Oil Production – Obama has presided over a remarkable boom in U.S. crude oil production, which nearly doubled during his tenure.

And even though the price of crude oil has recovered more recently to around $50, the Energy Information Administration predicted in its June Short-Term Energy Outlook that oil production will continue declining until 2017 before beginning to rise again, assuming that oil prices increase as expected, and that the industry implements productivity improvements.

Oil Imports & Dependency — Under Obama, U.S. reliance on imported oil has been cut by more than half. As of the first quarter of 2016, net imports were down 55 percent.

However, with recent declines in U.S. production, dependency on imports has begun creeping upward once again. For the first five months of 2016, imports have accounted for an average of 27 percent of consumption.

The U.S. oil boom is due mainly to advances in drilling technology rather than to any change in government policy. The decline in dependency on imports actually began in 2006, after peaking at 60.3 percent the year before.

Wind & Solar – Wind and solar power has more than quadrupled under Obama. Electricity generated by large-scale wind and solar power in the most recent 12 months on record (ending in April) was 322 percent higher than the total for 2008.

The increase in solar power in particular has been spectacular. The U.S. generated 33 times more electricity from solar power in the most recent 12 months than it did in the year before Obama took office. However, wind and solar still accounted for only 5.9 percent of total large-scale generation in the most recent 12 months (ending in April), up from 1.4 percent in 2008.

These figures are for “utility scale” electricity generation. In 2014, EIA also began tracking small-scale (under 1 megawatt) “distributed” solar voltaic generation, such as the power produced by rooftop systems installed by homeowners. In the most recent 12 months, wind and solar accounted for 6.1 percent of the combined total of utility-scale power and “distributed” solar power.

Car Mileage — The fuel efficiency of new vehicles has not improved since our last report.

The average EPA city/highway sticker mileage of light duty vehicles sold in June was 25.3 miles per gallon, according to the Transportation Research Institute of the University of Michigan. That’s exactly the same as the March figure we cited in our previous update.

But new-car mileage is now 20 percent higher than when Obama took office, far short of the 100 percent increase he promises.

One reason: Low gasoline prices have prompted consumers to buy more pickup trucks and big sport-utility vehicles, and not so many smaller, thrifty cars. So new-vehicle mileage has actually declined 1.9 percent since peaking in August 2014.

More are expected to be released in the closing months of the Obama presidency. The president said in a Dec. 18, 2015, news conference that “we will continue to steadily chip away at the numbers in Guantanamo.” And in February, he gave Congress his plan to transfer the remaining prisoners and finally to close the facility in Cuba.

War Deaths

Since our last report, another U.S. service member has died supporting continuing U.S. operations in Afghanistan. He was a Navy petty officer who died in Djibouti of what the Pentagon described as “a non-combat related injury.”

That death brought the total killed in the Afghan conflict to 1,752 since Obama took office, according to the tally kept by iCasualties.org.